Too Sweet
In the Southern parts of the US the 1234 cake is very popular.
One cup of butter, 2 cups of sugar, 3 cups of flour and 4 eggs, along with liquid, flavoring, and leavening.
Most recipes call for more flour than sugar.
I have witnessed a trend beginning in the sixties, where I felt homemakers were relying more on mixes and baking less from scratch.
It has been my experience most cakes and mixes commercially prepared have a higher sugar content than those made at home.
It has been my experience, working in the food manufacturing industry, in the preparation of mixes, all components are dehydrated.
Sugar is the heaviest ingredient and most mixes are sold by weight.
Sugar retards bacterial growth and slows rancidification of oils.
Sugar attracts moisture so the finished product will stale out more slowly.
It has been my experience, sugar is less expensive and more readily avaialable than in some places outside the US.
It has been my experience in working with with focus groups the desired flavor profile is getting sweeter and sweeter in baked good as time goes by.
Before powdered sugar, the homemaker cooked frostings which taste less sweet.
In my home, I baked from scratch, take the time to properly cream, aerate and combine the ingredients. I bake them in very good pans in the finest oven I can afford and take them out before they are too done. I do not use powdered sugar in the formulation of frosting.
Guests always say, I don't like cake its twwo sweet. They marvel at the difference.
On a good week I bake 10 cakes, which are taken by my friend to offices and parties all over the city, because they are different After the first bite, you know it did not come from a mix or bakery.
It has been my experience, I have studied, cooked, tested and served my food my entire life and I feel like I know a little bit about the art.
Food from the heart is art and medicine for the soul. My greatest desire is to nurture.
Kelly